Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jun 1965, p. 3

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en pe perpie ns Leeper Sen ae en ea ee ea a ee ean "Two CLAUSES TOGO | Medicare Debate Nearly Completed ronan (cr -- The pro-government - operated medical ~ longed, led study of On-care. tario's medical insurance bill Liberal and New Democratic seems to be almost over. spokesmen Friday criticized a As the Ontario legislature ad-Section of the bill ponies the journed Friday, all of the ape oe the power to make reg- ernment's medical insurance ' bill had passed clause-by-clause Elmer Sopha (L -- Sudbury) debate except the last two of Said the cabinet could change : just about every important 30 Sections and two attached vrinciple in the bill. Bureau- its could draw up regulations Labor Mihister Leslie Rown-(7* tres, who. is deputy hou se tor cabinet approval that would leader, said these will be tone the intent of the bill it- ished Monday. The legislature" pieq young NDP -- York- has been debating the bill allyiew) also criticized the fact week with the Opposition Lib-tnat 'most of the plan's oper- eral and New Democratic pat-ational procedures are not ties fighting a section-by-section .,eieq out in' the legislation rearguard action against thepyt will be laid out in the regu- bill and the Progressive Con-jations, servative .majority sweeping He said the house was being their amendments aside one by,.:eq to debate the bill blind- bse folded. It had not been told the The bill will make health in-premiums to be charged for 'surance universally available, medical insurance nor the con- but not compulsory. The gov-ditions attached to the plan's ernment will establish mini-operation. mum benefits that insurance Dr. Dymond said he cannot) companies may offer in stan-state what the premiums will} dard contracts and the max- be because these will be estab-) me gs ee charge. insurance council--to be set, up The province itself will act asunder the legislation. imum premiums they mayjished by the medical services | * SR eee abe hoe eee insurance carrier for hundreds He agreed that the bill gives) of thousands of persons in low-the cabinet broad powers to) ncome groups who will receivemake regulations affecting) subsidies toward the subscrip-medical insurance, but said tion rates of the health - carethere is nothing sinister in this. | plan. Generally, the plan will The regulations were fo give) cover care by physicians only.to downgrade benefits/ but to} es ™ \regation in the Chicago schools. nee a Saas bees il 'fi i i At Py , _ sesaigig Ss ceupe ea es Both opposition parties sup-government port universal, comprehensive, the power not Army demolition experts Redistributio Will Muddle By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP) -- The major political parties are geared up for reorganization jobs which will bring temporary chaos to the political scene next year. The reason is the redistribu- tion of parliamentary seats, now on the point of completing the first big stage. With new constituency boun- daries proposed publicly for six provinces, redistribution com- missions will put the finishing touches on their preliminary re- ports for the other four by July 7. <a The schedule is for the Sas- katchewan commission to re- port June 23, Alberta June 26 and Manitoba July 7. Ontario's new electoral map comes out Tuesday. The next stage is a series of public hearings to hear objec- tions to the boundary proposals. Then the commissions will write reports which will: go. be- fore Parliament. from Fort McNair inspect a cache of dynamite discov- expand them if. possible. ered in a woods in nearby Prince William County on as ns Confusion | northern Virgina. The Even- Scene In 196 | ing Star in a copyright story stituency organizations. Be nll gp scgepei eon aay fe'ar| AT-R-GLANCE principles which may be. ap- By THE CANADIAN PRESS plied to reorganization of new constituency associations. One official estimates that, if| necessary, the party could have the reorganization job done in FRIDAY, June 11, 1965 about three months from the pli Reb haggis ae day the final constituency maps the" Meecuree 6 cacheninling become law. But a more rea- ' : six, business: procedures. The formal vote on whether or not to impose a debate- limiting rule was approved 103 to 33. The .changes provide for limited question periods, lim- its for appropriations debates and abolition of the supper, and lunch recesses. They also revamp the Com- mons committees into 21 units corresponding to government agencies. sonable period would be months. Richard Trasher, Progressive Conservative national director, says his organization can be ready in a minimum of three) months. He figures that in about three-quarters of the 263 Commons ridings the present constituency association will af-| ford a base for a new constitu- ency association. New Democrat' chief organ- izer Russell Brown sees no lengthy or difficult problem for MONDAY, June 14 POLICE CRACK 'MINUTE The Commons wound up 15 | About two months after the reports are tabled in the Com-|tirely provincially - based. mons, the electoral boundaries} Whenever there's a federal) -- revised to meet objections ifjelection the provincial constitu- his. party because the New| i , : Democratic Party's organiza-| The Commons meets at 2:30 tional structure is almost en-| P.m\to study amendments to Bank. Act. The Senate adjourned until June the stands the commissions decide to dojency organizations come to- so--will become law. jgether to set ur election organ-| HAVE STARTED JOB The political parties have al- ready done some preliminary work on reshaping their con- 22. lization machinery for the fed-| eral ridings. The provincial as- PC Chief Slams saat machinery" "| Press Control Viet Nam Political Chaos: K Long Parade Of Coups rc By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS South Viet Nam has been in a political turmoil since Presi- dent Ngo Dinh Diem was over- thrown and assassinated less than 20 months ago. This is the parade of coups and governments: Nov. 1, 1963 -- After Diem's demise, Gen. Duong Van (Big) Minh proclaimed himself head of a ruling military junta. 1964 Jan. 30 -- Maj.-Gen. Nguyen Khanh ousted Minh in a swift, bloodless coup and on Aug. 16 made himself president of a military revolutionary council with extraordinary powers. Aug. 27 -- The revolutionary council named a triumvirate to head the government and Khanh became premier. | HUNTSVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- \Opposition Leader Diefenbaker [Friday said the government's |proposal to prohibit foreign Canadian daily "a flag- " jownership of newspapers constitutes violation of freedom of the press. Sept. 13--A bloodless coup led| It could damage the demo- by Brig.-Gen. Lam Van Phat|cratic process itself and open was put down by young officers|the way for "thought control loyal to Khanh. of radio and television. The Consevative party Oct. 30--Tran Van Huong, jjeader, speaking to a Kinsman mayor of Saigon, was named|convention, said "the premier succeeding Khanh, re- ophy_of the bureaucrat" lay be- storing a facade of civilian g0V-|hind government plans to pro- ernment. But the military re-|hipit foreign ownership of daily philos-; said the dynamite was found at a guerrilla warfare train- ing school built by a unit of the Minutemen organization. The discovery was made by Prince William County au- thorities and Virginia State LBJ's World-Travels Cut By Crises Around Globe One of the side effects .of the Vietnamese and Dominican crises is that they could turn |Lyndon Johnson into one of the ileast-travelled national «leaders lof his time. At the moment, of course, it would be out of the question for |Johnson to stray far from his Washington command post. But even if his two main in- ternational issuees were to sort themselves out quickly: it would be difficult to imagine Johnson packing his travelling bags.. The simple fact is that, until circumstances change radically, there are few countries that would welcome a Johnson visit 'and - probably fewer that he would want to visit. JAUNT TO CANADA Since he took office a year jand a half ago, Johnson has been out of the countr y only once--his quick sortie into Brit- ish Columbia last September to |seal the Columbia: River pact with Canada. Earlier this year there was talk of possible visits to Latin America, Canada and perhaps Europe. But even then Europe seemed unlikely, the problem being that he could hardly go to West Germany or. Britain with- out emphasizing growing differ- ences with France. And in the wake of: President de Gaulle's comment Thursday that the U.S. was involved in a | Family Goes To Perform MAN' ARMS CACHE Police, Sainte ation sup- pliedby the Fedéral Bureau of Investigation, the Star said. The photo was made by Joseph Silverman, Star photographer. (AP) 'Tough Part' Still To Come For Astronauts - Adoration HOUSTON (AP) -- James A. McDivitt and Edward White prepared today for what fellow astronauts have called "the toughest part of the mission'"-- the inevitable round of recep- tions, parades and celebrations. They relaxed at their homes near the manned space centre here, resting for the busy week ahead. It starts Monday with a ticker tape parade in Chicago. There is a homecoming celebration Tuesday »at the University of Michigan. Hometown welcom-|brought shocked expressions . to ings are scheduled Wednesday|the faces of the spacemen and in Jackson, Mich., for McDivitt their Wives. The astronauts be- Negro Pickets Threaten Parade For Space-Twins CHICAGO (AP) -- A ticker- tape parade here Monday for Gemini astronauts James Mc- Divitt and Edward White may be picketed by demonstrators protesting alleged de facto seg- avd in San Antonio, Tex., for White. McDivitt and White got a sur- prise Friday--a '"'little some- thing' from President Johnson in the way of promotions. changed the gold major's leaves! of their U.S. Air Force tunics to the silver of lieutenant-col- onels. The president, in a visit to the manned spacecraft centre, made on - the - spot promo- tions. His announce ment About 300 marchers, on their way to the méeting with the mayor, lined up in two lanes along Lakeshore Drive to begin the 2%4-mile march to city hall. After the marchers had gone a few hundred yards, police or- dered them to walk in one lane, About 120 policemen were on hand. The marchers began sprawl- ing along the roadway. Many went limp as police carried them into waiting police vans The possibility of demonstra- tions arose after more than 200 civil rights marchers were ar- rested Friday at a mass 'sit+ down on a busy roadway on Chicago's lakefront. Pickets would "not be per: mitted to interfere. with the|but others kicked, bit and strug- astronauts' line of march," /gled. |Mayor Richard J. Daley said. Among those" arrested were | Albert Raby, a high school teacher who led the lakefront protest, told reporters that dem- onstrations would continue through the weekend. | "Starting Monday," he added, \"'we're going to see to it that it will be a long, hot summer for Daley. Every Negro' who cannot march will be asked to turn on all his faucets and drain the water." James Farmer, head of the Congress of Racial Equality; Syd C. Finley, an official of the National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People; Negro comedian Dick Gregory and Raby. Raby was released on' $100 bail. Most of those arrested were charged, police said, with bat- They|moted air force majors Gordon ewe ee a ee a THE OSHAWA TIMES, gy Soa mmiehiig ht tain airing aie , Saturday, June 12, 1965 - 3 ee a) ~ came majors only last Decem- ber. * While speaking to 4,000 space centre employees under a hot Texas sun, Johnson also pro- Cooper and Virgil I. (Gus) Gris- som to lieutenant-colonel. Grissom was command pilot for the first manned Gemini mission. Cooper is scheduled to command a seven-day mission in late August. The promotions came after McDivitt and White relived their space feats during a two- hour television - press confer- ence, NO SENSATION White said he had no sensa- tion of falling when he stepped from the speeding capsule for his walk 105 miles above the earth. "I will try to describe it as best I can to you,"' said White. "There was absolutely no sen- sation of falling. There was very little sensation of speed,| other than the same type of sensation that we had in the capsule, and I would say it would be very similar to flying! over the earth from about 20,-) Albert Was Caught In The 'Acts' VANCOUVER (CP).-- Albert Emerson Simpson was re- manded Friday on two counts of.» uttering forged acts of Parlia-, ment which bore a replica of . the signature of Governor-Gen-~ eral Georges . Vanier. ves Preliminary hearing of the. charges against the 43-year-old construction worker, who once.; was a prison guard: will con-. tinue Monday. ' 'a Det. William Thorpe told. ma. gistrate's court he compared: three copies of the Governor-. General's signature obtained from the Queen's representative here Thursday night and: said. they were not the same as those, of the documents Thorpe is ace. cused of forging. Baa Governor-General and Mme._ Vanier are in Vancouver on a@ Western Canada tour. The Crown charges that Simp- son forged a parliamentary bill annulling his marriage to Alma Helen Simpson and another "act of Parliament' to permit him to marry Christine Adelle MacLellan. Crown counsel told court the |purpose of the first document 000 feet. was to cinvince Miss MacLel- "You can't actually see thejlan that Simpson was free to earth moving underneath you.|re-marry and the second to Sa-. I think as I stepped out, I/tisfy Miss MacLellan, who later thought probably the biggest/bore him three children, that thing was a feeling of accomp- lishment of one of the goals of the Gemini IV mission." her union with him was. mor-* ally and religiously in order. Later, both men told The As- sociated Press they would like to have stayed in their cramped space vehicle another day. But both admitted the decision to! come down at the end of the planned four days was a wise one. NEED A NEW FURNACE? Neo Down Payment---First Payment December--Call : PERRY Day or Night . . . 723-3443 | tery, resisting arrest or ob- structing justice. Bail from $50 to $100. Some integrationists have in- dicated the astronauts' appear- "dirty affair" in Viet Nam, the chances of the French leader ever exchanging visits with Johnson seems remote. Latin America is also out of the question for the near future. Here the difficulty is that all the "nice people'; of Latin America -- the democratic re- gimes such as those of Mexico, Uruguay, Chile and Venezuela-- are -the very ones that fought hardest against U.S. in- |tervention in the Dominican Re- public. Johnson's advisers would not likely welcome a Latin Ameri-} in only the regimes and can swing taking rightist military dictatorships. PROMISE OF TROUBLE have} ance for the parade will be ranged] greeted by demonstrations. 'We have done everything we jpossibly can do to co-operate |with them or anyone else in |this question,"' said Daley. He had moved up a meeting with the protestors from Mon. | day to Friday in an effort to) halt demonstrations, which in-| HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. cluded an unofficial schoo! boy-| nee Trees P oe 24-HOUR SERVICE e protests arose from the! rehiring of Schools Supt. Ben- 723-4663 jamin C. Willis, described by ' civil rights leaders as the man SERVING OSHAWA OVER responsible for what they called 50 YEARS de facto school segregation. Opportunity for In the vast Afro-Asian world, Japan is one of the few major} countries that could figure in future travel plans, But the cer-) tainty of leftist demonstrations! make any TRAINED PRACTICAL likely as long as the Vietnamese cauldron continues to bubble. As for Canada, the chances of a Johnson visit appear to be completely up in the air, de- pending on future developments. They also could depend on just how serious the "argument" was between Johnson and Prime Minister Pearson at their last meeting at Caimp David, Md., in April. One of the few climates that might be congenial for presi- dential touring is that of New Zealand and Australia. Both countries are supporting the Americans on Viet Nam. But even here his advisers might be reluctant, feeling that a visit down under would-be an admission that there was no- Japanese visit an mained the real power. Dec, 20--The young officers dissolved the high national council, the provisional Jegisla- ture and arrested a number of civilians, | nounced full power had been re-| stored to the civilian gov-! jernment. newspapers by disallowing for tax purposes any advertising expenditures in such publica- tions. -The government bill was pro- posed in Finance Minister Gor- don's April 26 budget. 1965 "An enlightened electorate is Jan. 9 -- The military re-|the essence of free govern-| leased the civilians and an-|/ment,"' said Mr. Diefenbaker, "and a vital need for a vital democracy is that the press shall with impartiality keep the Aug. 29--Khanh resigned as) Jan. 27--Khanh resumed con-\PUblic fully informed of parlia- premier and Nguyen Xuan|trol of the government, threw)/Mentary and public affairs. Oanh, an economist and Har- vard graduate, became acting premier. ' Sept. 5--Khanh returned as premier, Congressman Fears N-War OTTAWA (CP) -- U.S. Con- gressman George E. Brown said here Friday there is no question that the Vietnamese war could result in a nuclear exchange that would destroy a large part of the world. The California Dem 0 crat, here for a conference on Viet Nam organized by the Cana- dian Friends (Quakers) service committee, told a press confer- ence a_ series of retaliations and counter - retaliations could cause things to 'blow 'sky- high" within one to three years. Chances are 50-50 that China now is preparing to move troops into North Viet Nam. He also said the U.S. position in Viet Nam was morally wrong because the North Vietnamese government -- though directed by Communists -- is a govern- ment of the people. The U.S. has violated international agreements and supported dic- tatorial. governments jout Huong, and placed Oanh in| | office again as acting premier. Feb. 16--Phan Huy Quat, a {former foreign minister, . be- jcame premier, but Khanh re- mained the real power. | Feb..19--Phat and other gen-| erals staged a coup, claiming Khanh was a dictator, but their uprising was put down. Feb. 20 -- Military leaders} turned on Khanh with a vote of) no confidence. He became a| roving ambassador. May 20--The government ar- rested 41 persons, 17 of them militany men, claiming tained. May 25--Quat reshuffled cab-| inet to strengthen government,}| but retained Maj.-Gen. Nguyen! Van. Thieu as deputy premier and defence minister, indicating the military wanted to keep its watchdog powers over the re- gime. May 28--Catholics complained a proposed religious law gave them inferior status to Bud- dhists. | June 4--The national legisla- tive council gave Quat a vote of confidence, saying he had a right to fire two cabinet mem- bers in the May 25 reshuffle. June 5 -- Several. hundred Catholics clashed with police in 'Fo perform this funttion, freedom of the press if neces- sary." PILL CREATES BETTER LATES SASKATOON (CP) -- The | Canadian agriculture de- partment is working on a birth control pill for tur- keys. Ken Swan, a federal gov- ernment hatchery mMspector told the Saskatchewan Tur- Association 'Thursday y| key plotted a coup. Some Roma that it is hoped the pill can Catholics were among those de-} DAused to delay egg-laying by y Canadian breeding flocks until after U.S. flocks have finished their egg-lay- ing period. Jote Canadian turkey egrs then could be exported to the U.S. in greater num- bers. Turkeys normally lay éggs in the early summer. FOUND GAS The world's third-largest gas reservoir was found in Holland in 1961, setting off a prospecting surge in the North Sea. POWERFUL TIDES The tides of the Bay of Fundy: "There is no possible' way, to|Saigon during a demonstration hivhest in the world, are esti- justify our being there, except as rabid anti-communists." | charging the government anti-Catholic and neutralist, was maied '000,000 horsepower, to -have a force of ~ where else that he could go. Plumbers Back, In U.K. Show | WELLAND, Ont. (CP)--The! Bishop family, three. paar) rodeo performers from nearby} |Ridgeville, left here Thursday; to join a rodeo and Canadian| BRANTFORD (CP)--Work re- exhibition formed by seven On-|Sumed at most construction tario cowboys. in Blackpool,|Sites in Brant and Norfolk-coun- England : ties Friday although a--plumb- The Bishop family is the van-\°TS Strike which tied up activ. \guard of a new contingent of ay fay two days remained 20 Ontario rodeo entertainers! U"SCtued. __ ; i going to Britain. Pickets set up Wednesday igo |were. removed to allow other The seven cowboys already building trades to return to there decided to form their own their jobs. However, no plumb- rodeo when a $900,000 cowboy|;,, a "ill bb all d and Indian show, sponsored bY!" tocal 674 of the United Asso- (Transatlantic Exhibition Ser-| ciation of Journeymen, Plumb: tg yo pear eo ae and Fitters (CLC), repre- add at Blacibool senting about 60 men, and fhe . he : oe? car ant daa inall 'Brantford Master Plumbers' As- | e rodeo was originally) sociation appear no closer to \scheduled to. open at Blackpool |cetfling ves oe |June 21, with about 50 Cana-) ----___ ldian cowboys and 10 Indians| GOOD FOOD from the Six Nations Reserve BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH near Brantford and continue} until Sept. 11. | Following the " project's col-) 12 Noon to 2 P.M. jlapse, the cowboys repudiated; DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. jtheir agreement with TANS. 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